Erik Blankinship wrote:
> Let me explain what I am trying to achieve: I am creating a "picture in
> a picture effect" (using XV in a window, amongst other windows). GTK
> doesn't play well with overlapping widgets, and gtk.Fixed() doesn't
> guarantee Z-order. So I am using a stack of gtk.Windows without
> decoration to achieve the desired effect, but the appearance is that
> everything looks like a nice gtk layout.
Sorry, got confused by your description; I thought you were trying to
change stacking on the fly by swapping transient-fors around.
But anyway, you still have the problem that "transient for" doesn't
actually mean anything having to do with stacking. (In fact, the ICCCM
lists a bunch of things a window manager might do differently with
transient windows, but stacking order isn't one of them.) So (1) setting
transient-for on a window won't necessarily affect its stacking, and (2)
it may affect it in ways other than stacking. (Eg, matchbox appears to
assume that any window that has WM_TRANSIENT_FOR set is a dialog box.)
So your best bet is probably to make your own version of gtk.Fixed that
does have a guaranteed Z-order, rather than trying to bend the wm to
your will.
Marco says "I seem to remember blizzard wrote something like that for
mozilla gtk2". You *might* also be able to get gtk.Fixed to work just by
calling raise()/lower() on the child widgets' GdkWindows to stack them
the way you want within the Fixed. (Or just by being sure to show() them
in bottom-to-top order.)
-- Dan